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Shattered Glass
Shattered Glass
Shattered Glass
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Shattered Glass

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A male prostitute, a mangy cat, a murder and an obsession that threatens his career, his impending marriage and his life. Nothing is going as planned for Austin Glass.

Austin Glass seems to have it all, A loving fiancee, a future with the FBI and a healthy sized trust fund. At least on the surface. He also has a grin and a wisecrack for every situation. But the smile he presents to the world hides a painful past he’s buried too deeply to remember, and his quips mask bitterness and insecurity. Austin has himself and most of the whole world fooled—until he meets a redhead in a pair of bunny slippers.

As events unfold in the biggest case of his life, Austin’s carefully planned future unravels, and he finds himself pushed into making quick, life-changing decisions. But can he trust himself or anything he feels, when each event seems to be just a series of volatile reactions?

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 31, 2012
ISBN9781465850096
Shattered Glass
Author

Dani Alexander

The type of books I like to write: I love romance with an edge. A good story with lots of angst and a healthy dose of laughter. My stories will bludgeon you with angst and then make you laugh through your tears (I hope). I enjoy suspense and my characters often have killers, guns, knives, Albanian women with big hands and/or psychopaths chasing them. Somehow they even manage to have sex during all of that running/investigating. I like writing sex scenes. I love writing sex scenes. But the sex in my stories is never gratuitous. Speaking of sex, I love kinks. Bondage, masochism, sadism, domination, slave, uniform fetishes, latex, toys. As long as it’s consensual, it’s fair game. My characters: Quirkier the better. That’s my motto. And lots of flaws. Like me. I’m a giant flaw with one redeeming quality. I won’t tell you what it is. (It’s that I’ve got great fans/readers!) The vague personal stuff: I’m married. I came out to my husband and he is nothing but supportive. He loves to read my stories and edit, but he refuses to read the sex scenes. This is why I have to read them several times and so does my editor. (I’m totally not making that up.... Really.... totally.) Also, I have cats. And a dog. The boring history: I wrote my first story when I was 15 years old. It was a fanfiction RP fic starring me and the lead singer of my favorite band at the time. Needless to say, I burned that when I found it a few years ago. And then I ate the carbon dust. You will never know of my erotic limo rides with Dave Ga- er... I mean.... Nothing to see here. NOTHING TO SEE. Moving on. After finding that story, the writing bug slipped into my skin and began an itchy reminder to put some words on paper. I couldn’t quite find my way to a story that made sense to me or that made me feel emotionally invested in the characters. Then I found the world of original slash fiction and fanfiction. Having been a gay rights activist, a PFlag member and finally an out and proud genderqueer individual, I felt I’d finally delved into a world I both understood and felt inherently part of. The moment I started writing slash (m/m or gay fiction) I couldn’t stop. I wrote my first story – which I will publish for free once I have time to edit it – in a month. The second story came just as naturally, though I took my time and crafted it over the period of a year. It’s my first release called Shattered Glass. I decided when it was time, that I would self publish my novels. Not that I have a problem with publishing houses. After all I was a member of Less Than Three press and I buy more books at Amazon, Dreamspinner Press and Samhain than I should. I made the decision to self publish because I wanted control over my story and my cover. I may change my mind and submit later stories to ebook publishers, but for now, I’m all on my own. Let me know if I’ve made the right decision by reviewing my stories =D.

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Rating: 4.300505101010101 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I wanted to love this story, but I just felt like Peter and Austin were all over the place. Like I kept feeling that Peter was using Austin just to get what he needed, and Austin sort of picked up on it but never really confronted him about it. Then finding out Peter is actually straight, but he typically has sex with guys including Darryl?! I guess I just never really felt any chemistry or connection between Peter and Austin. I do love Cai though, and I hope he gets his FBI agent!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Finding out that you are gay when you are already 26 can be tough, especially when you are engaged to get married and the suddenly existing object of your affection turns out to be a bunny slipper wearing son of a mobster who might be a drug dealer or maybe a murderer. All at once the life of Austin Glass shatters into little pieces. He was getting used to deal with his problems with his dad but now not doing what his father wants has huge implications. While his career as a police agent appears to go down the drain, he tries to find out who is a killer, who is doing drugs and how he can embrace a homosexual lifestyle that actually works.This book is very funny to read although sometimes less would have been more because the moral and emotional dilemmas of the main characters are only skin-deep unfortunately. Less shallow and less witty would have been great.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    4.5 Stars

    Stunningly written! OMG.. I loved the writing.. really the whole thing! It was so good, funny, sexy, exciting.. everything really.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is easily one of the best books I've read this year. I loved the characters, all of them. Three sentences in and I was thoroughly hooked. I couldn't put it down, all because of the "f***ing bunny slippers."

    If you haven't read this yet, I highly recommend it. Five stars is not nearly enough it deserves ten. There is suppose to be another book in this series, I can't wait to read it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this story. It was sweet & tender in places, heartbreaking in others, hot, but mostly I found myself literally laughing out loud at the main character's thoughts and biting wit. A truly enjoyable read that I couldn't put down.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    All the other reviewers have already said it all.

    This is a book that maybe shouldn't work, but so totally did. So much happened, in such a short period of time, I almost got whiplash a few times, trying to keep up with events. But the characters were so great (not always likable, but great anyway), they kept me engaged from the beginning.

    And the chapter titles were such a hoot, I actually looked forward to finishing one, just to see the title of the next one. Of course that played hell with trying to put it down to sleep, cause I kept having to find out what the heck that title meant!

    Can't wait to read more by this author, which is hopefully gonna include stories for Cai and Riley, and Daryll and whoever is man enough to put up with him
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Happy Hump Day people! Oh MY GOD!! This book was amazing-just amazing. I loved Austin, the main character, and Peter, the man with the bunny slippers. And Cai, the boy wonder with a paintbrush. This story made me laugh out loud, made tears come to my eyes, and made me sigh with delight. I want more please.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I LOVED this book. You definitely need some willing suspension of disbelief, but it was such a pleasure to read. The pacing was excellent, the tension was palpable and it was hot. The mystery and cop stuff intertwined effortlessly and I really liked all the secondary characters. Fingers crossed for a Cai story!

    Loved the characters, loved the rambling style and I cannot wait to read her next book. It cannot come soon enough!

    AND srsly, 2.99 at ARe?? Buy it now!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Loved very page of it. I laughed so many times. The characters are insane and lovable and the story keeps you guessing. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Really got to know the characters well. Particularly liked Peter though Cai was a close second.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This little darling is going onto my faves bookshelf for the following reasons:• It surpassed my expectations in the clever stakes... Seriously, the subplot was brilliant.• It's so sexy I had to fan myself. Often. • Hilariously entertaining. Austin's internal dialogue was just golden. • The supporting characters were rich and engaging. I <3 Dani Alexander.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Note to self: I will will will not continue reading a book I find boring and can't get into, no matter how many books I've already "dnf-ed" this month.

    I liked the first 25 percent of the story. The humour of the I-narrator, Austin, wasn't really my cup of tea, but I got into it and found it quite amusing how he became obsessed with bunny slippers worn by a sexy redhead.

    The story is quite long, counting about 360 pages, and again I encountered the same problem as with many longer romances nowadays, too little plot too much blabla in the middle of the story. A lot of cussing and unfortunately no hot sex scenes to tide me over the boring middle part, as the heroes don't actually have sex together until the ending and then it was such an anticlimax and let down.

    All together Shattered Glass was a truly unsatisfactory read for me so that I probably won't try out this author again. D-

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A really enjoyable read. The blurb doesn't do it justice. I've had it in my TBR stack for awhile but after hearing so many raves about it I finally dove in and I am so glad I did! So, so good! And there's a sequel due this year - yay! Austin is so hilarious & I'll never be able to look at bunny slippers the same way again. Thank you to everyone who recommended it to me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really enjoyed this book. It did take the first chapter for me to fully engage but when I did, I didn't want to put it down. I'm a sucker for humour and a book that can make me laugh out loud, and even have to put it down for a minute to get myself back under control (cats and rimjobs), is a keeper. It wasn't all guffaws, though. I found myself tearing up several times.

    Having said that, I didn't really connect at all with Austin until I was nearly half-way through. Together, he and Peter were fabulous, he and Luis were fantastic, but Austin alone just didn't make much of an impression at first. Perhaps it was intentional slow reveal, but if so, it nearly backfired with me only a few pages away from putting it on the 'didn't finish' pile. Austin seems one-dimensional at first - shallow, flippant, a touch arrogant - all of which happen to be major turn offs for me when it comes to a POV character. He opens up as the book goes on, revealing more vulnerable and complex layers, much like Peter does with Austin in the story.

    I love Cai, though. From the moment we met him, he has personality and so much life. Darryl, too, added extra edge and balanced Cai's sweetness with his snark. I loved Luis and his relationship with Austin, also. Their banter was perfect and made me chuckle.

    The story was well paced and suspenseful with twists I didn't see coming until they were right there in front of me. I started reading in bed and regretfully put it down to sleep, picking it up again as soon as I woke. Definitely a keeper and one I'll read again.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Love, love, love.

    This book had the perfect mix of love, sex, humor, drama, heartbreak and mystery for me. There's a bit of everything and just in the right dose.

    I adored the main characters and would love to read more about them, although I'm just as excited to read Cai's story who might not be as innocent as he sounded at first but I got a definite soft spot for the kid.

    Austin's story really moved me and I can't say it often enough: I really fucking hate judgemental idiots. Nobody can't help who they fall in love with and sadly enough, homosexual relationships are still a focus point for haters. I never understood what the problem is and probably never will, I'm glad though that authors like Dani Alexander remind people that it's still problem today. In the story, Austin's humor (and sometimes gallow humor) often counteracted the harsh words regarding his sexual oriention (which honestly should be nobody's business but his own).

    Peter is an unique character that I instantly loved even when I wanted to yell at him for being an idiot. I can't relate what goes through a person's mind or what the person has lived trough in order to push people away by offering sex as a substitute for almost everything. No matter what situation Peter finds himself in, he always tries to fix it with sex. He is scared: let's have sex. He needs money: let's have sex. He feels insecure: let's have sex. I found myself completely fascinated by his way of thinking, maybe even because I can't personally relate to it.

    But in the end, Austin and Peter both do some growing up and work towards becoming the person they want to be. It's a lovely journey that I thoroughly enjoyed.

    The story itself is at times a little far-fetched but I didn't mind that at all in this case because it also provided some nice action and mystery. There's not only a love story here but also a nice plot that kept me guessing the whole time and which I would've never figured out on my own. The author has a definite way with words and wrote a beautifully flowing story that I couldn't read fast enough.

    So in logical consequence: 5 captivating stars.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow this story took me longer to read than anything else I've read lately. There were so many twists and turns in this story. And just when you think you are finally winding down there are a few more bombshells that need to explode. This story really keeps you on the edge of sheet.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent story with extremely riveting characters and a unique romance. It's hard not to love all of them, even with their many, many faults. My only concern during the story was about the confusing murder plot. However, once the case was solved, it was all explained and made complete sense. The dialogue in this story was amazing. The epilogue was awesome leaving me very excited to read the next story!! I can certainly see why this is a favorite for so many people!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Another great case of unreliable first person narrative.

    For those who think Austin is a prick, look at the reactions of those he interacts with interacts with. He is his worst critic and his inner monolgues are a sarcastic look at himself.

    Yeah, if you take everything he says or thinks at face value, he is a bastard, but if you look at what he does, he isn't.

    It is his defence against the world.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Why I read it: I've seen this one recommended by a number of trusted reviewers to I took the plunge. I'm glad I did - it was certainly worth my time and it was a bargain at $2.99 on the Kindle.What it's about: (from Goodreads) A male prostitute, a mangy cat, a murder and a maniacal mix-up that threatens his career, his impending marriage and his life. Nothing is going as planned for Austin Glass. Austin seems to have it all. At least on the surface. A loving fiancee. A future with the FBI and a healthy sized trust fund. He also has a grin and a wisecrack for every situation. But the smile he presents to everyone hides a painful past he’s buried too deeply to remember. And his quips mask bitterness and insecurity. Austin has himself and most of the whole world fooled. Until he meets someone who immediately sees him better than he sees himself. As events unfold and Austin’s world unravels, he finds himself pushed into making quick life-changing decisions. But can he trust Peter or what’s happening between them when each meeting seems to be just a series of volatile reactions?What worked for me (and what didn't): This quirky m/m romance come detective novel comes with bags of humour, an engaging, if very large, cast of characters and angsty goodness to top it all off. Told in Austin's 1st person POV (except for a brief flashback scene in Peter's POV), the writing style is light and funny, with Austin delivering cracking one-liners, mainly at his own expense. His characterisation is very consistent and his arc is believable. Events shortly before the commencement of the book have left him ripe for an implosion and, when he meets bunny-slipper wearing Peter at a diner when he's waiting for an informant, his heretofore buried homosexuality makes itself known - along with all the baggage he's been hiding as well. Austin's life - his job, his relationship with fiancee Angelica, his relationship with his co-workers and his plans to join the FBI are all threatened by his burgeoning feelings for Peter. But, can he be trusted? It seems that almost every word coming out of Peter's mouth is a lie. There is enough there however, for Austin to keep coming back. As Austin is presented as someone who's lid has finally blown off rather than it being a totally new revelation, I found his journey to be quite believable, even if some of the individual decisions in terms of his position as a detective and his dealings with the criminal justice system were more than questionable. He did face consequences for those decisions though so, even though some of those things were perhaps a bit on the unbelievable side, it wasn't magically made better and it gave some balance to those aspects of the story.Peter was harder to get to know. As we see him almost exclusively from Austin's POV. There were a couple of questions I had about him even at the end (which the author was kind enough to answer for me when I emailed her - she was a bit too subtle for me in places!).There were some small editing issues in the book - some random words cropping up in the middle of a sentence where they didn't belong, a few typos - this is a self published piece but frankly, I've seen the same (and even much worse) errors in traditionally published books. I did notice it however so it gets a mention here.To add to the sense of quirk this book has in spades, each section has a brief sentence providing a descriptor of the scene to come. Eg, Fucking Bunny Slippers Not a Cock Sucking Fixation Givin' It Before Gettin' It - Always Beat Them To the Punch The Truth Sucks. And It Is Awesome It was amusing at first but I was a bit over it by the end. If it had been each chapter instead of each scene change, I don't think I would have got so sick of it but the scene changes were frequent and it seemed like there was one of these lines every 2 or 3 pages.The plot is convoluted - but the book is 331 pages long on my reader, so we are talking a full length novel here - there is room and time for the large cast of characters - they pretty much all had things to do and they were all distinct enough that it wasn't difficult to keep track of. However convoluted the plot, it made sense and I never felt that the story was being tortured into a twisted knot to make it all fit - clearly the author knew where this was going from the beginning. As this was as much a noir-ish detective novel as a romance, I appreciated that very much.I also appreciated that the female characters in the book were not caricatures - I've seen a few complaints about the place that a lot of m/m romance seems to be very woman-hating - in that female characters are all the evil-witches of evil and there are no nice ones. I'm not all that sensitive about the issue (I'm not sure what that says about me!) but I've seen the complaint enough that I noticed here that character's like Dave's wife, Marta, the fiancee/ex-fiancee, Angelica and even Cai's mother, are portrayed in a (mostly) flattering light.What else? My buddy Kris rated this one 4 stars on Goodreads, which is like an 11 for anyone else so you don't just have to take my word for it.There are more books in this world coming out later this year I believe and I'm certainly looking forward to Cai and Agent Cordova's story.Grade: B

Book preview

Shattered Glass - Dani Alexander

SHATTERED GLASS

BY

DANI ALEXANDER

Shattered Glass Copyright  2011 Dani Alexander.

All rights reserved. Published 2012.

ISBN:

ISBN-13: 978-1470005863

Publisher: Dani Alexander

Cover art: Dani Alexander

The right of Dani Alexander to be identified as author of this Work has been asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in retrieval system, copied in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise transmitted without written permission from the publisher. You must not circulate this book in any format.

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are the product of Dani Alexander's imagination, or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living, dead or somewhere in between; businesses, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

Smashwords Edition, License Notes

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard workof this author.

Dedication

I dedicate this book to Troy and Gene. Two men who have always accepted the crazy, weird and often abrasive person I am, but who have had to fight to be accepted by the world despite being the most loving, kind people anyone could hope to know.

Acknowledgements

My heartfelt thanks to Tim, Sara, Sian, Anke and my husband, without whom I would have crawled under the table and covered my head. Even as a writer, there aren’t words enough to express the depth of my gratitude for the help and support you gave me

.

Table of Contents

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Epilogue

About the Author

Chapter One

Fucking Bunny Slippers

Colorado’s Finest Diner was ugly. I had an excess of time to study it in the two hours I waited for my no-show informant. Brown booths. Yellowed walls and floors. Yellowed tables, for that matter. The window on my right displayed beat-up Fords and Volkswagens that were roasting on pavement and swimming in refracting light. The inhabitants of the diner were more interesting. Teenagers mostly, snacking on fries and chicken fingers. Baubles bounced from their eyebrows and black-painted lips while they chatted energetically. My gaze hopped from one table to the next. With all the boisterous laughter and the rapid fingers texting, it was the quiet, methodical busboy who caught and held my eye. He was wearing bunny slippers.

Dingy pink and brown ears languished against aged linoleum, making a soft sh-sh sound as the man gathered used dinnerware and placed them in a tub at his hip. Curious about the wearer, I skipped over the ripped pajama bottoms and stained tank top, to his face. My breath caught.

Model beautiful, with thick red hair and millions of freckles, the man was as incongruous to the setting as those endearing slippers.

Gaines says he’ll get Alvarado there, Detective Luis Martinez relayed into the cell phone tucked against my ear.

Uh huh, I replied. Vice busts weren’t that interesting right now. Bunny Slippers was pierced. Lots of places. Little rings, nipple high, were outlined under his tank top and the ones in his ears and eyebrow glinted. I immediately began to speculate where else he was pierced.

Glass? Luis huffed into my ear. Glass, get your head in the game.

Blue eyes. No, not just blue, blue like glacial waters, like romantic poems, like heavens and moonstones. Cornflower blue. And—

Blue like romantic poems? What the ever-living fuck? I turned away quickly and tried to concentrate on Luis’s voice.

What? Oh. I gave my head a shake, scattering the strange thoughts. If Gaines says Alvarado will be there, we go with that. My guy is a no-show. Gaines is all we have now. I hoped that was the response Luis was waiting for because Bunny Slippers was coming my way, and I lost all ability to think.

Can I take that for ya? He had a deep drawl. Not Texas, like my mother, but perhaps Alabama or Georgia. I was so wrapped up in the voice that it took a moment to follow the long, slim finger pointing across the table at my syrup-filled plate. My attention snapped back to the busboy.

Up close Bunny Slippers was even more gorgeous, and older than I’d originally assumed. Freckles dusted his skin from forehead to fingers. A colorful tattoo of the god Hermes covered the right arm from shoulder to elbow. A busboy with an interest in mythology?

Glass? Luis growled.

My brain had left the building. Huh? I replied brilliantly, to the busboy, not to Luis. I could barely hear Luis. Cold blue eyes. That was all I could concentrate on. Cold but captivating. I had always thought freckles went with innocence, but there was nothing innocent about those eyes.

"Glass? ¡Carajo! Glass!"

What was someone who looked that good, doing working as a busboy in a place this ugly?

GLASS! Luis blasted into the phone, a stream of Spanish invectives following the shout.

The yell snapped me out of my daze. What the fuck, Luis? Someone is talking to me here. Settle your dick down. Great, I had now acknowledged that while I knew slippers-boy was speaking to me, I had just been staring at him. The slight smirk spreading across the man’s perfect lips told me he had noticed the gawping, too.

With considerable effort, I flicked a glance to the plate, knowing there was a question in there somewhere.

Your plate? The busboy motioned once more, this time leaning across the table. The scent of tobacco, soap and cinnamon made my mind go blank again. I closed my eyes and inhaled, unconsciously lifting a hand to brush my knuckle on the underside of the man’s reaching arm.

Apparently this was an awesome time to not only discover I had a bunny slipper fetish, but to violate someone’s arm in public. Some guy’s arm.

Yeah, I said stiffly, dragging my offending appendages into my lap before they did something stupid, like tweak a nipple ring. Luckily, the guy hadn’t noticed the knuckle-assault, or else he was choosing to ignore it. Please let it be the former.

I felt twelve again, those nervous flutters in my stomach appearing for the first time since I had let Mitzi Baylor tongue kiss me in eighth grade. Okay, let is probably the wrong word. More like forced her tongue into my mouth while I tried to protect my tonsils from unexpected removal. The memory was enough to jar me back into reality a second time. I checked my phone. Luis had hung up. With a sigh, I tucked the cell into my pocket. I’d deal with Luis at work Monday.

Bunny Slippers had long since grabbed my plate and was making his way back to the kitchen without a single backwards glance. He hipped the swinging door and disappeared into the back. It was only then that I managed to exhale.

Get a grip, idiot. This is a bad time to ogle teenagers.

Is there ever a good time to ogle teenage boys?

All these weird thoughts were giving me a headache. The guy was just interesting. That was all. Like spotting an exotic flower in a field of—

I really needed to stop thinking like my eleven-year-old poetry-writing cousin. Actually, I just needed to leave. Stop thinking about this and leave. After paying the bill, I slid sunglasses over my eyes and pushed out into the summer sun.

Little beads of sweat popped up on the bridge of my nose, tempting me to remove the offending eyewear. But the light bouncing off my side mirror convinced me that dealing with irritating sweat was better than being blind.

Colorado heat didn’t blast so much as bake. It was a deceiving warmth, slowly building like a preheating oven and just as dry. The other trick of summer in the Mile High City of Denver—breezes. They moved lackadaisically, intermittently dying out and then ambling back, providing little in the way of their supposed function: cooling. By the time I had walked across the small parking lot and opened the door to my Jag, my hair was hot enough to fry an egg, and I dearly wished to be wearing shorts rather than full length khakis. I pinched the fabric of my cotton shirt and waved it while the single breeze that rolled through offered only a tumbling brown paper bag and no relief from the warmth. Across the street, a bank marquee announced the date and today’s temperature: ninety-seven degrees.

Ignition on, A/C maxed, I left the door open while waiting for the air to cool. Maybe another breeze would surprise me and suck the staleness from the car. Sitting half-in, half-out, I heard the door opening in the alley beside the restaurant. I saw him in the rearview first, then swiveled in my seat to check the back window.

Bunny Slippers leaned against the wall, dragging a foot up to brace behind him and cupping his hand over his face. I fixated on the tattoo marking the web of his fingers, my pulse jumping. When the hand dropped to his side, he took a long drag of his cigarette. His mouth puckering and blowing a cloud of smoke toward the sky was sufficiently erotic enough to ignore the nag of the tattoo and focus on his lips.

I hated smoking. The smell alone was enough to nauseate me. But right then, more than anything, I wanted to be that cigarette.

I was unsettled by an onslaught of unbidden fantasies, which ranged from pressing my lips against the guy’s neck to grinding our hips together. I wasn't sure how long I watched him, but I knew it was long enough for my neck to cramp. Sweat accumulated under my glasses, spreading to my forehead and upper lip and eventually dripping down my temple. The cool air blowing from the car created a stark contrast to the heat outside, but I wasn’t at all sure it was what made me shiver.

His head swiveled slowly against the wall, turning to my Jag. No smirk this time, but those eyes were no less beautiful for being empty. The pit of my stomach clenched.

I had seen that look before—abuse victims, prostitutes, dealers, pimps, they all carried it. Grief, sudden and powerful, poured over me in waves, making me avert my eyes. Broken boy, was all I could think. Broken people were dangerous. I swung my legs in and slammed the driver’s door, backing quickly out of parking spot. It took every ounce of my will to avoid glancing into the rearview mirror as I pulled onto the street.

I aimed the Jag downtown where my tuxedo was getting fitted.

The tuxedo you’re getting married in, Austin. The tuxedo you’re marrying Angelica in, Austin, I reminded myself.

Not a Cock Sucking Fixation

Downtown was a maze of cross streets which, like slippers-boy, were incongruous with the rest of their surroundings. While most streets across Denver ran vertically and parallel to each other, some cruel genius decided to build downtown streets diagonally. Although I had lived in the city all of my adult life and had been made to study every street when I had patrolled as a rookie, downtown still remained the most frustrating area to navigate. I usually ended up making at least one wrong turn. And since the streets alternated one-way, whenever I missed one, I had to drive a few extra blocks to get back on track; which meant running into a gazillion traffic lights and waiting for the Light Rail trolleys or shuttle buses to pass. Which also meant that today I was later than I otherwise would’ve been, and I had to call my fiancée.

Mm, you’re late. What have you been up to? Angelica’s soft voice, filled with amusement, was about the only thing that could make me smile right now.

Ogling young, pretty boys in diners, I replied. As predicted, she laughed.

Long as it’s not pretty girls. Static told me she had covered the mouthpiece. Jeffrey wants to know how long it’ll be until you get here?

If I can find a parking spot, and a street that doesn’t lead one way to hell? Maybe fifteen minutes.

You said that an hour ago, she reminded me.

I’m downtown now. Looking for a parking spot.

I flipped off a street sign that didn’t conform to my need to go right, earning a glare from a misunderstanding motorist who yelled, Cocksucker! as I passed. I briefly considered rolling down my window and explaining that I was not, in fact, a cocksucker; that it was just that one fantasy. And besides, I was fairly sure I had a bunny slipper fetish, not a cock sucking fixation. That seemed like a lot of information to impart in the second and a half we had before he pulled ahead of me, so I let it slide.

The fact that I was more comfortable owning up to the slippers thing and not the cocksucker thing was mildly disturbing. I’d rather have a footwear fetish than a sudden attraction to penises? Yeah, that sounded about right.

Just park anywhere. You can afford the ticket. Angelica had no logic when it came to money. Her idea made complete sense to her. Paying for a ticket was infinitely easier than finding a legal parking spot. And as a trust fund baby, I could just as easily pay it. The only problem was that downtown also enjoyed a healthy respect for tow trucks. And no one was going to tow away my beloved Arturo—so named after my training officer.

I see an open lot. Be there in fifteen. Love you. I hung up after hearing her reply in kind and then pulled into a garage parking structure. After parking and paying, I walked the half block to the 16th Street Pedestrian Mall.

The mall stretched, coincidentally, sixteen blocks, straight down into the heart of the business district. Large granite sidewalks extended six feet out on either side of the shuttle bus lanes. Restaurants, office buildings, outdoor cafés, street vendors, shopping centers and upscale boutiques huddled together on each block. The tailor was at the far end of the mall—not a long walk, but, with the crowds, an annoying one.

The only vehicles allowed on the two-lane road between the sidewalks were police cars, vendor trucks and environmentally friendly shuttle buses. Otherwise, the mall was strictly foot traffic. On weekdays, it teemed with businessmen and women, as well as tourists. In the evenings and on weekends, suburbanites bustled past street performers and the homeless. Almost half of the dirty outstretched hands belonged to teenagers. They were the ones that I had difficulty ignoring. Especially today, with the image of that broken boy still haunting my conscience. My gaze kept wandering down to feet, checking for bunny slippers.

I jammed whatever bills and change I had into their hats or hands, until, when I ran out of cash, I had to jump on the overstuffed shuttle. The shuttle wasn’t air conditioned, so I arrived at the tailor shop baked and glazed with sweat like the main dish at a luau. Angelica was too engrossed in a gold tie to notice my disheveled appearance.

Pricks and Bunnies

Angelica was, as always, elegant and beautiful. Her brown hair fell into soft waves at her shoulders, and her summer halter dress glowed bright with white polka dots.

Austin, I’m rethinking the gold, she said when the bell over the door announced my arrival. Her lips were pursed in deliberation as she held up the gold tie with a navy print, tapping her patent high-heeled shoe against the marble floor.

Grateful for something new to think about, I pushed the weirdness of redhead fantasies out of my head and gave my attention to Angelica. Propping an elbow on a nearby shelf, I rested my chin in my hand, basking in the air conditioning. We could make a rainbow of all the colors you’ve run through, Angel.

Her lips pursed for a moment then slowly curved upward. Bit political, her hand waved, But I’d go with that. We could have a gay wedding. Rainbow suits and ties? Jessica would be pleased. She regarded the ceiling in contemplation. Only her teasing smile gave away she wasn’t serious.

I refuse to make such a suit, mademoiselle! Jeffrey, of Jeffrey’s Custom Tailor, was a small man with long pointed nose, frizzy grey hair and a constantly furrowed brow. Though that last descriptor might be due to our presence, rather than a permanent state. Not that I could blame the tailor. With each of our six visits, Angelica decided on a different style or color. So far, poor Jeffrey had been commissioned for three different suits: one black, one brown, and most recently, one navy; as well as two tuxedos.

I don’t really think she wants a rainbow suit, I reassured him, hiding my grin. To Angelica I raised an eyebrow. Is your sister gay now? I’m losing track of her sexuality. One week bi, one week straight. It changes faster than our wedding colors, and that’s saying something. What are they now, by the way?

I don’t know. I think she’s still testing the waters. She told mom she was going to Pridefest and ride a Harley naked with some woman called… She tapped her perfectly manicured nail against a pile of shirts, I don’t actually remember what she was called. Something that sent mom into fits because it was definitely female. Putting down the gold tie, Angelica held up a grey cravat dotted with dark flecks for my inspection. Navy and silver? Can we see that navy suit again, Jeffrey?

Great. I wouldn’t even need Jeffrey. I could just wear my dress uniform. Jeffrey threw me a look bordering on murderous and stomped to the back room. Actually, wearing my dress uniform would have been preferable. The idea of wearing another tuxedo for any occasion made my skin itch.

Mm. You are yummy when you wear your costume.

Uniform, I corrected with a rueful grin and chuckle.

Whatever, she replied airily and laid the grey tie atop a stack of white button-down shirts. She didn't mean to be flippant about my job; she was just preoccupied with wedding planning.

Exactly, I said. Whatever you want.

You’re not helpful, she said and shook her head, smiling absently.

Because I want to live to see twenty-seven. You’re on the wrong side of crazy with this wedding planning.

Pah, Angelica huffed. You’re exaggerating.

I really wasn’t. Angelica was one of the kindest and most uncomplicated women I knew; but since she’d started planning this wedding, I was a little afraid. And I dealt with drug dealers and crack whores for a living.

She had fired the caterers when they didn’t condescend to make a buffet style dessert table. The florist had quit after Angelica had said she wanted the roses to match the bridesmaids’ dresses, and then promptly changed the wedding colors two days later. She had asked me to tell Mark, one of my groomsmen, to wear heels because he was shorter than all the bridesmaids. I refused and she blamed me for all of the bridesmaids wearing ballet slippers.

Later she would apologize and promise to do better. We forgave her because, in all honesty, the girl who apologized was our Angelica, not the crazy bride.

Angelica was the barracuda lawyer to whom I could send troubled kids and expect her to defend them vigorously from prosecution. She routinely tried to cook dinner and laughed harder than I when it ended up smelling like an outhouse. She dropped her head and snored loudly when I talked about sports. She burped and watched Saturday morning cartoons.

Angelica was not flakey or indecisive. Until she had to pick chiffon or silk, or roses or chrysanthemums.

Truth be told, I didn’t recognize her during wedding planning. So I preferred to steer clear of it.

Should I stay for another fitting, or have we determined my uniform will work? Or maybe the navy suit he already made? I asked. Jeffrey, carrying said suit, was approaching us. The sound that echoed in his throat conjured up images of choking cats.

We’re going with the navy suit, Angelica decided with a perfunctory nod and wrinkled her nose at the bundle the tailor held. Oh, not that one, Jeffrey, the one with the mandarin collar, she clarified.

The strangling cat sound erupted as a screech. That was black, mademoiselle. Not navy! I stifled a grin.

Mm. Oh, Jeffrey, calm down. It’s basically the same suit, just in navy. She patted his wiry hair and walked toward the back rooms. Jeffrey’s face was red enough to sub as a police light. Don’t disappear, Austin, Angelica called over her shoulder. I watched the way her ass moved under the halter dress. And stop leering. It’s unnerving poor Jeffrey.

Wouldn’t dream of leaving. Or of stopping my leering. But I’m reasonably sure you’re the one unnerving him. The little man made another choked sound and tensed so hard he shook. Being fitted for another suit while a pin-wielding Jeffrey was in the apoplectic throes of agony, officially made me a masochist. By the end of the day I’d have enough pricks to prove it.

I should stop thinking about pricks. And bunnies. And pricks fucking bunn—

Please, I beg of you, stop her, Monsieur Glass, The tailor’s nervous eyes twitched from Angelica at the back of the shop, to me. I couldn’t blame him for his plea; she was now investigating a beige suit jacket. I haven’t completed one suit!

Now, now, Jeffrey, eight more weeks and we’ll both be put out of our tailoring misery.

Douchebag of the Year Award

Two hours later, Angelica twined her fingers with mine as we walked toward my car. We would split up for the day before arriving there, as she had things to do that would only annoy you, Austin. The wedding colors had been officially changed to navy and silver; though by the next week I expected them to be red and gold, or even pink and black. I was relaxed enough that my mind wandered back to slippers-boy as we moved quietly through the mall. Which relegated me to Biggest Asshole on the Planet.

I needed to stop thinking about it. Him. I felt like such a jerk. Especially since I was so lucky to be with her.

Austin? Angelica prodded me out of my musings. "What are you thinking about?"

I offered a guilty smile at her furrowed brow. How lucky I am, I said, touching her hand to my lips while wiggling my brows.

She laughed musically and leaned into my arm. The bump was too soft for any effect other than to cause me to look at her. I winced when I compared her tanned shoulder to freckled skin. I was a bastard. Angelica was beautiful, both inside and out, and to compare her to some grungy man-child was Grade-A douchbaggery.

My dress came in today, Angelica sighed blissfully, her green eyes glazing over. Unbidden, I pictured eyes the color of the sky.

Can I come in your dress today? My brows waggled again, earning another bright laugh from her.

Mm. Maybe later this week. Oh, and don’t forget we have the gala next Sunday. We stopped at a nearby hotel, using their taxi stand to get her a ride home. With a quick kiss and a gentle wave, she climbed into the first cab that pulled up and they drove off.

Continuing the Douchebag of the Year theme, I walked the half block, got into Arturo and drove thirty blocks out of my way to pass slipper-boy’s diner.

I honestly had no idea why I was there, or why I couldn’t keep my mind off him. Him. I even had to keep reminding myself it was a him. Not a her. No breasts. And, I guessed, no vagina. Definitely a him. And my fantasies were filling with images of his mouth on naked things of mine.

Naked things. With a guy. Naked things with a guy. Surreal.

I sat outside for half an hour with those words buzzing in my ear, before giving myself a mental slap and driving home. I resolved to forget about Bunny Slippers.

A block later the resolve crumbled as I began picturing those slippers’ ears flopping around with the guy’s feet in the air while I pounded into—

Jesus! Okay, that’s just disturbing.

We Played Football Together, They Can’t Be Gay

Back at my apartment, I sat at the computer and shuffled through websites. The moment I found myself downloading the wrong kind of porn, I figured I should go out. I needed to get my mind off sex. It was nearly an impossible feat, so I settled for keeping my mind off sex with a guy. Seriously. What the fuck?

I wasn’t gay. You don’t go twenty-six years before the gay gene suddenly just kicks in. It didn’t work like that. I was sure of it. Not that I knew that much about being gay. I had one friend with same-sex orientation, and Dana hadn’t spoken to me since I asked her to describe her honeymoon in graphic detail—and then made vibrator noises. Actually, I would have called Dana anyway, but she was out of town until the end of the month.

Obviously Angelica’s sister came to mind. But Jessica had about as much figured out as I did. And if she was a lesbian, well, I probably would be less interested in that aspect of gay life than my current dilemma. I decided to call my best friend.

When I was in eighth grade, I used a self-timing camera to take nude pictures of myself in various stages of erection. I then exchanged my biology teacher’s slides with the images. The teacher, in a state of panic, kept rapidly pressing the ‘next’ button. It was like a pornographic flip-book. That was the last straw in a very heavy pile of straws. I was expelled, and I ended up transferring mid-year from boarding school to a public school near home.

In retrospect, I probably shouldn’t have included my grinning face in the pictures. With a thumbs up next to my penis.

Having spent the previous years at an overseas coed Catholic preparatory school, I had no idea how to cope with students who were not rich and privileged. I went from being one of sixty students to one of fifteen hundred plus. On my first day of class, I wore my former school uniform: tie, blazer, tan pants, button-down shirt. I don’t remember much except dark lockers and so many wedgies that even at age twenty-six I couldn’t see a thong without cringing.

By the end of the day, a sophomore named David Buchanan had rescued me and taken me under his wing. We had been getting in trouble ever since.

Dave was now married, and his wife was pregnant with their fourth child. He was the first person I went to when the world confused me. Which it often did. Do you know any gay guys? I asked when he picked up the phone.

Why? Are you switching teams? I heard the low chuckle on the other end.

I’m not sure. Maybe, I answered sincerely. He laughed again, because that’s what everyone did when I told the truth. It was a little disconcerting.

Yeah, I know some gay guys. And you do, too.

I know some gay guys? News to me.

Jake and Terry.

They’re not gay, I argued.

Yeah? You better tell them to stop sleeping together, then.

We played football with Jake and Terry, I maintained. They can’t be gay. They were also cops, like us. I was sure I didn’t know any gay cops. The stationhouse didn’t have the most gay friendly atmosphere.

The silence on the other end was either him covering the phone to laugh, or him waiting for me not to be stupid. Usually it was the latter.

This for a case? There was a hint of amusement in his voice. I pulled the phone away and studied it, unsure of how to answer that question.

No. I need to know about ass-sex. Dave choked, ended up in a coughing fit and, from the clunk on the other side, I guessed he must have dropped the phone. I grinned, having already figured that would be his response. When the coughing had subsided, I attempted to change the subject—before he took me seriously. How’s Marta?

Beautiful, he answered.

Am I still banned from Sunday night dinners? Marta was Swedish, tall, and always pregnant. But I should have asked David if she was pregnant that last time I saw her, because Marta was also a very large woman—rotund, my grandfather would have said. And I was very congratulatory.

Next time, ask me first. She was barely three weeks along. Not showing at all. This sent us both into nervous laughter. Not only because we were ashamed. If she heard us laughing about it, she’d stop making those awesome Swedish brownies.

I plan on it. Give my love to the rugrats. And tell her if it’s a boy, she should name him Austin.

I’ll skip that recommendation. You’re not at the top of her favorite people list.

Tell her I’m sorry. Again. I sighed.

Send her a pair of baby sneakers. She goes nuts for baby things.

She’ll have them by Friday, I promised.

Gotta go, he replied, and in the background I heard screaming which sounded like their two year old, Petra.

Go, I laughed.

After we hung up I considered calling Terry or Jake, but I needed a game plan first. I didn’t really want another set of friends banning me from their houses—or house. I really should have asked Dave if they lived together. Terry’s cell was programmed into my phone. I made a mental note to call. Later. Tomorrow. Next month. Or January.

On another note, now that I thought about it, I seemed to get banned from a lot of friends’ homes.

Tapping my fingers against the computer desk, I considered what to do next. I was avoiding the computer because of the gay porn, avoiding Angelica because I was guilty of wanting to watch gay porn, and avoiding my friends because I had to ask them about gay porn—or being gay, same difference. I could have called my father, but it would be too tempting to piss him off by telling him I might be gay. Which I wasn’t.

I settled on a beer and ESPN.

By the time I crawled into bed, I refused to acknowledge the last few minutes of beating off while watching the Duke/Notre Dame lacrosse match. I rolled over and forced myself to go over my Sunday routine of workouts, sports bars and what to do in the absence of my normal Sunday dinner at Dave’s.

Chapter Two

Denial. How fucking works it?

Sunday morning I opened my eyes and immediately went into denial.

I was not gay. I was engaged. To a woman. I wasn’t gay. And I backed up my denial with some sound reasoning.

First, I masturbated to images of women. I fantasized about women. Sure, there were men in my fantasies, but they were always doing women. Everyone did that. There were never solo men in my fantasies. Or my porn—discounting the previous night’s anomaly. Therefore, I wasn’t gay.

Second, people didn’t suddenly wake up gay. Being gay wasn’t like changing eye colors; you couldn’t just get contacts and Whammo!—gayness. Point two for me. Not gay.

Third, I had sex with women. Six women, in fact, since I graduated from high school. I had even been engaged to women before Angelica—who I’d been with for three years now. A man didn’t date a woman in her mid-thirties without realizing commitment was going to be on the table—very prominently, lit up with flashing lights, stacked above everything else, on the table. If I was that eager to get into a committed relationship with a woman—point three in the ‘not gay’ column.

And finally, being gay would seriously piss off my dad. Something I enjoyed immensely. The fact that I was debating if I could possibly be gay, and not driving over there to watch him keel over in shock as I announced it—another tick for ‘not gay’.

That settled that, then.

I’m not gay, I told my ceiling.

Taking a deep breath, I crawled out of bed and grabbed a pair of track pants. After getting dressed, I tried to avoid all internal discussions and zoned out watching ESPN while running on the treadmill. That plan was shot to shit the moment I turned on the TV.

There was no way gay men watched as much ESPN as I did—another check to the 'not gay' column. My confidence was returning; that made five ticks in column ‘not gay’, zero ticks for column ‘gay’. I felt immeasurably better. Until I entered the shower.

Why were men, who weren’t me, figuring in my fantasies at all? That was the first question that popped up in my mind. My subconscious, not-so-covertly, slipped into my head, You’ve cheated on every woman you’ve been with.

Yes, but with other women, I answered it.

Because you didn’t want to get married, it said.

The relationships weren’t working.

Shut up.

I didn’t even need my subconscious to argue why the relationships weren’t working: Sex.

It had never been exactly perfect. I had never felt that burning sensation in my stomach when I was around women or when I met someone new. But I was twenty-six. Kids got that feeling, not adults.

Mitzi. That was the last time I had felt that sensation. She was a girl.

That was your first kiss, though, and twenty-some other kids were watching.

Stop thinking about this! Easy to say, impossible to do.

That wasn’t the last time, now that I was thinking about what-I-wasn’t-supposed-to-be-thinking-about. I paused in the middle of soaping up my chest.

It wasn’t Mitzi. It was Jesse Chambroy, and I had been fourteen. I exhaled sharply and collapsed against the tile wall. After standing under the spray, in shock, for a good ten minutes, I climbed out of the shower, carefully, and braced my hands against the counter top, dripping onto my bathmat. I stared up into the mirror. My stunned brown eyes staring back at me.

Jesse Chambroy, the captain of the varsity football team. Muscled jock who’d had a smile like Tom Cruise. How could I have forgotten that? How could I have forgotten him?

Austin or Alex or Idiot

I’m not gay. That wasn’t what I meant to say. At least not so bluntly. It had just become a mantra as I drove across town. Repeated over and over so many times that, by the time I stood in the diner, confronted once again by this visceral attraction to a perfect stranger, the words tumbled out.

Congratulations. Would you like a medal? Bunny Slippers asked.

I already have a medal. For bravery, not for being gay. I think you made me gay.

"I made you gay? He set down the napkin he was holding. Is that better or worse than the person who made you stupid?

Worse, I answered automatically. Then I computed what he said. Ouch. I have a degree.

What are pointless and obtuse bits of information, Alex?

Austin, I corrected.

Right now, you’re Alex.

What? This conversation wasn’t going at all like I planned.

This is Jeopardy, right? You give all the answers, I tell you the questions?

You’re confusing, I answered. Confusing and beautiful. Jesus. So beautiful. His eyes were bright and angry, framed by thick copper lashes. Another white t-shirt wrapped itself tightly against his chest and stomach, showing off his lean body. I might have drooled.

Bunny Slippers watched my appraisal for at least a full minute before clasping his hands and resting them on the table. "You stand in the doorway, clothes sticking to you like you just got

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